DNA vaccines
Posted: Tue Aug 05, 2014 12:14 pm
Perhaps most of you have already heard of the following, but I haven't until today, so I thought that I would bring it up and see what you-all have to say. I am usually the smartest person in the room, but not here.
I watched a David Pogue Nature show on NetFlix from 2013, and he had a short segment about a type of "vaccine" in which a DNA strand for the immunity from a person who was immune to that pathogen was introduced into the patient by way of a little patch with tiny spikes on it. The spikes were like 1/2 of a millimeter, and David didn't feel a thing. But the strand DNA gets into the patient's DNA and causes him/her to now be immune to the disease.
I forget a lot of it. But I am multivalent about it. Partly it seems even scarier than conventional vaccinations. Partly I am thinking that isn't this how we become immune in the natural way; our DNA is altered so that our bodies can fight off the germ. Partly I am reminded that if we keep our pH around 7.4, we wouldn't be getting sick in the first place. Partly I fear censure by this group for having any kind of positive feelings about the matter. (:->)
Sincerely,
Roger Bird
I watched a David Pogue Nature show on NetFlix from 2013, and he had a short segment about a type of "vaccine" in which a DNA strand for the immunity from a person who was immune to that pathogen was introduced into the patient by way of a little patch with tiny spikes on it. The spikes were like 1/2 of a millimeter, and David didn't feel a thing. But the strand DNA gets into the patient's DNA and causes him/her to now be immune to the disease.
I forget a lot of it. But I am multivalent about it. Partly it seems even scarier than conventional vaccinations. Partly I am thinking that isn't this how we become immune in the natural way; our DNA is altered so that our bodies can fight off the germ. Partly I am reminded that if we keep our pH around 7.4, we wouldn't be getting sick in the first place. Partly I fear censure by this group for having any kind of positive feelings about the matter. (:->)
Sincerely,
Roger Bird